Author's Note: So, I wrote this while sick. Coughing, sore throat, runny nose, the WORKS! So, it's a bit shorter than previous chapters and future chapters. For this, I am sorry. But if you feel any up-swelling of ire for this, know, I am being punished even as you think it with my sickness. Bleh.
The Tale of Resh Craig
June 4
th
, 1876
Somewhere on the Morbihan Plains
The evening had reached that fine time, the only time between mid-morning to the setting of the harsh sun where the Morbihan became livable. The fire crackled and popped and some chuckslag was slowly simmering in a cast iron pot. The men gathered around the fire were, on the whole, unwashed, unshaven, and nonhuman. The faint sound of conversation could be heard from quite a distance, interspersed with laughs, boasts, brags and the occasional shove.
"Read 'em and weep, Resh," Don Throgg said, grinning as he laid out a set of five cards on the ground. By the distant fire, Resh could see them: An Ace and King of spades, a Queen of diamonds, a Jack and Ten of hearts.
Resh grinned toothily right back, sprawling against his rolled up backpack, which itself was stuffed with the clothes that no longer fit him. Resh had hit his third growth spurt of the year, but he stayed in the awkward gangly stage of any male going from youth to adulthood. Don was in a similar state, though he held himself with considerably more grace. Resh, though, had the more nimble hands. He laid down his cards, then swept his finger out, spreading his cards along the ground between them.
"Ah shit," Don muttered.
"A royal straight flush," Resh said, gesturing to the five glittering diamonds before him.
Don reached into his belt for some shillings.
The whole gang was relaxing after the latest robbery. It had gone down as easy as fresh bacon: They had ridden up to the side of the train as it had slowed while reaching a switching station. Two guards had gone with throwing up their hands and dropping their pieces, rather than going down with bullets in their briskets, and the gang had split the job as they always did. Resh and Don robbed the passengers, while Turuk and Greek found any safe and ripped it free, and Telly Telly Longthews filched anything that smelled magical to his big, gnomish nose.
Resh had been the one to spot the package carried by the fellow with the graying mustaches and the thick, Arlander accent. That package, even now, was sitting quietly in his hiding hole, ticking happily. He and Don had checked it on the train, to make sure it wasn't any kind of bomb. It wasn't. It was instead something obviously Technological in nature, obvious enough that if they could find a seller, they'd all be rich as...well, as thieves.
"So, I guess I-" Don started, then stopped. He and Resh both tensed. Had that been a snapping twig or-
Turuk stood up at the fire, calling out. "Chuck's ready-"
The half-ogre's head snapped back, cracking nearly as loudly as the gunshot. The back of his skull exploded into a haze of red and he started to topple. The entire gang sprang to their feet, reaching for weapons - save for Longthews, who started to incant. The flare of red magic around his palms might have been why four bullets caught him in the chest and sent him sprawling into the fire, knocking the pail of chuckslag onto the embers. The entire camp went dark and Resh and Don both booked it, running as fast and as hard as they could.
In the pale light of the stars, the forms of the horses around them were dark shadows, even with orcish night vision. They circled around them and then a brilliant light flared into their eyes. Magick, a cantrip floating above the head of human with a thick handlebar mustache and flint gray eyes. He wore the uniform of a marshal, and he had the great big glittering gold star on his breast to prove it. He held a revolver casually at his hip, while his fellow marshals paced their horses about the two half-orcs.
"Well, well, well," the marshal said. "If it isn't the Morbihan boys..."
Resh did as Resh always did: He grinned an unassuming smile up at the marshal and tried for casual. "Evening, Marshal Earp. How are the gods treating you this fine evening?"
"You never did know when to quit, Craig," Marshal Earp said. "Where is it?"
"Where's what?" Resh asked, frowning.
"The package, boy!" Marshal Earp said, his face set in a frown.
"We don't know anything about no package," Don said, holding his hands up above his head. "And if you're gonna hang us, hang us."
"Oh, there'll be a hanging, all right," Earp said, his voice growing quiet. "But not until my employers get their property back."
Resh licked his lips. "Listen, Mr. Marshal, you ain't exactly giving us a great offer here. We tell you where we put the ticking box, which is what I'm guessing you want, and we're gonna just git hung, right? Right?" He nodded, his throat growing dry. "So, I figure, you let us maybe just go to prison for a spell, we'll come out proper, and you don't have to riddle us with lead. We all win, eh? Eh?" He wiggled his eyebrows at Earp.
Earp frowned. "Boy, your tongue got you out from under my sights once. It's not happening again."
"Resh, maybe we should just tell him..." Don said, quietly.
"Don, I got this," Resh hissed back. Then, looking at Earp, he grinned insolently. "I know you don't like killing unless you gotta, Mr. Marshal, and-"
The sudden bark of a pistol jerked Resh to the side. He felt something hot and wet splash against him and jerked around - his eyes wide. Don sprawled on the ground, blood puddling underneath him, a hole on his back, clear as day. Another horse was cantering up - a bright white mare, and on it sat a fellow who looked as fancy as any Resh had ever seen. And familiar. The gaying mustache. The sneer. And the thick Arlander accent that he used sealed the deal.
"We do not negotiate with greenskin barbarians," the Arlander said, his smoking pistol flashing in the dark again. Resh flinched as another bullet struck his friend. He cried out despite himself. "Where. Is. The package."
Resh whimpered.
When dawn broke, Resh's fingers were aching and his body trembled with exertion. But he had finally dragged out the package from where he had buried it. It still ticked beneath the wrapping of canvas that he had thrown around it, and the man on the white mare slid off his saddle and crunched over, his silver spurs glinting in the gathering sunlight. Kneeling down, he swung the package open, and then nodded. "It's functioning," he said, standing up. "Your assistance has been quite appreciated, Marshal Earp."
Earp grunted monosyllabically. If Resh had been in a different frame of mind, he might have seen how Earp had been glaring at the man on the white mare for the entire evening - his lips pursed into a tight line. That glare saved Resh's life - for when the man aimed his revolver at Resh's head, Earp coughed, then spat a thin line of tobacco out onto the desert sands.
"Do they kill
all
criminals in cold blood in Arland?" he asked.
Resh clenched his eyes shut, ready for the sharp crack and his trip into whatever waited beyond. Instead, he heard the faint
click
of a hammer being set back to rest, and the shifting of stance that meant the gun was no longer being aimed at his green forehead. When he opened his eye, he saw that the man on the white mare was regarding him with a sneer.
"True," he said. "I suppose that he'll do in the Blackpits..." He looked at the Marshals. "String him up."
Resh did not even struggle as he was tied, bound, blind folded and thrown over the ass of a horse. The weeks that followed was a progression of discomfort and humiliation - the ride to Tarant had him being treated the whole way like a sack of meat, put on horse after horse, never given more than a sip to drink or a bit of cooled chuckslag to eat. His belly gnawed at him, but his mind continued to see the image of his friend, Don, shot in the back like a dog. Once in the bustling city of Tarant, he barely had a moment to view the buildings...rather, he was thrust into a stagecoach, and that coach started for the Stonewall Mountains - to head through one of the passes open at this time of year and into the Kingdom of Arland itself.
The stagecoach was no improvement. He was forced to sit with his spine back, stiffening in discomfort, his wrists shackled in iron and his face covered with a burlap sack, the faint
click
of metal on metal on cloth reminding him that a guard sat across from him the entire time, a loaded scattergun on his lap. At any moment, at his whim, that guard could blow Resh's brains out and there was not a thing that he could do.
On the fifth day of this mute, muffled hell...salvation struck.